Featured Author: Sommers

11/29/2013

(This is my last post: Big thanks to Thomas and all the Flickerers who joined into these discussions. It's been an interesting and challenging month. Don't forget to listen to the Very Bad Wizards Podcast! On to the post...)

Defenders of the standard retributive model often talk as if the punishment of wrongdoers by itself restores the self-respect of victims. Retributive punishment, they say, sends a message to the offender and society that the victim is a person, that he or she has rights that cannot be violated. This may be true in some imagined world of Kantian idealists, but it has no basis in real life. As the psychologist Dale Miller has argued, the way we respond to insults affects our self-image and our image in the eyes of others. The failure to respond can further diminish victims, it can mark them as cowards in their own eyes and the eyes of others.

11/24/2013

In the first two posts of this series I sketched out Moore's methodology and why he thinks the retributive emotions are virtuous. (See the end of this post for a quick summary.) I haven't given my own position on all this yet--that's what this post is for. I like Moore's methodology (without his unnecessary metaethical assumptions) but I do not think it means what he thinks it means. I'm going to argue that Moore's approach leads to principles of punishment that bear more resemblance to restorative or corrective theories punishment than the standard retributivist model that Moore favors.

11/19/2013

In the comments for the previous post, a couple of you questioned whether the retributive emotions are virtuous. Moore considers this question at some length in his book. He takes Nietzsche to be the best critic of the retributive emotions and tries to respond. Here's Moore:

Moore concedes that our retributive judgments can at times driven by the non-virtuous emotion of envy. Since our weakness prevents direct us from retaliating directly, “our perceived helplessness transforms the anger into the brooding resentment of those who lack power.” (121) Moore agrees that this form of resentment is ugly and harmful, and that it poisons the soul. He also concedes that the retributive emotions can be linked with cruelty, sadistic pleasure at the suffering of others, saying "surely, one of the uglier spectacles of our times are the parties by fraternity boys outside the gates of prisons where an execution is taking place…"

11/16/2013

The challenge for retributivists is to explain why offenders deserve to suffer when the punishment has no benefit to overall well-being. Rationalist justifications for retributive punishment haven't met with much success. What Michael Moore says about utilitarian justifications—“bad reasons for what we believe on instinct anyway” is even more true of the rationalist accounts of Kant, Hegel, and more recently Herbert Morris. Moore has developed a more promising non-rationalist and non-foundationalist justification of retributivist principles. Moore’s basic approach is to argue that the retributivist principle--the principle that offenders ought to suffer for wrongdoing--offers the best explanation for our particular judgments about cases of wrongdoing. Unlike his rationalist counterparts, Moore is happy to allow emotions to play a central role in his justification for retributivism. Emotions, according to Moore, are a fallible but crucial indication of the truth of our moral judgments.

11/11/2013

Justin Coates sent me this great quote from Williams' "Morality, The Peculiar Institution" that expresses my worry from this post.

""There are, equally, various negative reactions to [vicious persons], from hatred and horror in the most extreme cases, to anger, regret, correction, blame. When we are not within the formal circumstances of the state's law, there is the further dimension of who is reactive: not everyone can or should sustain every complaint. It is another consequence of the fiction of the moral law that this truth does not occur to us. It is as if every member of the notional republic were empowered to make a citizen's arrest."

11/09/2013

Busybody
[biz-ee-bod-ee]noun: a person who pries into or
meddles in the affairs of others.

In the last two posts I described some cases
that are hard for most existing theories of moral responsibility to
handle. What I want to suggest in this
post is that any attempt to develop a systematic condition-based theory of
responsibility is both philosophically and morally problematic. Why morally?
Because it turns philosophers into meddlesome busybodies who stick their
noses in the private affairs of others and don't know when to mind their own
business.

So here's the set-up: Sarah is at a party and has a few too many
glasses of wine on a relatively empty stomach.
She overhears her colleague Emma talking about her in another
conversation. She’s drunk and she misinterprets
the meaning of Emma’s remarks and gets angry.
Without thinking, Sarah confronts Emma and lets off some biting insults
about her performance at work. Emma is
bewildered and humiliated in front of her friends and co-workers. Soon, the initial misunderstanding is cleared
up and Sarah, mortified, realizes she was way out of line. She offers a bunch
of drunken apologies, but the damage is done.
Emma is furious and resentful and Sarah feels terrible overwhelming
guilt what happened.

(Note: quick shout-out to the two students at
Mississippi State where I gave a talk with this dialogue--they gave the
definitive performances in the roles of Sarah and Emma.
They were like Brando in Streetcar,
their performances can never be equaled.)

How would philosophers and their theories of
moral responsibility handle this kind of incident? Here's the dialogue.

11/05/2013

Quick follow-up post because Neal and Dan's comments reminded me of an issue that I've been wanting to discuss on this blog for a while. Way back in Very Bad Wizards episode 13 (we just recorded #35!), Fiery Cushman joined us and raised a fascinating possibility. The case is exactly the same as the one Dan mentioned in his comment for the previous post. I accidentally back over my neighbor's dog. I did not do it through negligence, there was no reasonable way for me to know that the dog was behind my car. Fiery suggested that in this case, I should hold myself responsible (and blame myself) but the neighbor shouldn't blame/hold me responsible.

As I understand the idea, there's no fact of the matter about whether I am responsible/blameworthy for this act. It depends on which perspective you inhabit. Even more so than the Orestes case, this seems (a) plausible and (b) not able to be captured in virtually all theories of moral responsibility that I'm aware. But I haven't thought deeply about (b)--maybe some theories are able to capture this kind of case. I also wonder how far this phenomenon extends even to more straightforward-seeming cases of wrongdoing.

11/04/2013

The
Greek myths and dramas are a tremendous source for puzzles about
responsibility, agency, and fate. One of
my favorites is the story of Agamemnon, Clytemnestra, and there three children. Agamemnon is a king with a family history
that is far more twisted and violent than anything Tarantino could dream
up. (You can read a decent summary
of the history here.) The story I'm concerned with
starts when Agamemnon is about to lead the Greek Army to Troy to fight the
Trojan War and get back Helen for his brother. Unfortunately, because of a personal grudge,
Artemis (a god) has stilled the winds preventing them from sailing. But they have to sail, it’s fate, Zeus has
decreed that they will defeat the Trojans.
The only way for to Agamemnon appease Artemis is to sacrifice the thing
most precious to him: his daughter Iphigenia.
And so he does.

11/02/2013

I
want to thank Thomas Nadelhoffer for this opportunity, it's a great honor to be
the featured author this month here at Flickers of Freedom. This blog along with its previous incarnation
has been the most important venue for my philosophical development over the years,
the place I've always gone to work out my constantly changing ideas about free
will and moral responsibility. Because we have such a supportive community at
the senior level, I was never afraid to float arguments or raise questions that
were just taking shape in my confused mind.
Some of them turned out to be just as stupid or misguided as I feared. But others became the basis of my published
work. I don't think I have a single
publication on this topic that wasn't floated and hashed out on Flickers or
Garden first.

In that spirit, while I
hope that the big guns will tear into me as usual, I'd like to urge the younger
philosophers to join the conversation as well.
Don't worry about how well-formed your ideas are. You can't say anything sillier or more ill-advised
than I have on multiple occasions and will probably continue to do in these
very posts. Feel free to post drunk too.

Here's
the plan as I see it now. Sunday or
Monday I'll begin with a little desert puzzle that comes from Euripides' Electra, one of the endlessly
fascinating Greek dramas we teach in our Great Books course here at U of
H. I follow that up in a few days with
my most inflammatory post this month (I think): a dialogue that accuses all of
us being a bunch of philosophical busybodies.
I'll then offer a series of two or three posts on the methodology behind
the criminologist Michael Moore's
defense of retributivism. Finally,
if I have time, I'll do a Manuel-style sociological post that should leave
everyone mad at me and grateful that it's Joe Campbell's turn. Looking forward to it!

11/01/2013

It's once again time to hand off the torch from one Featured Author to the next. But before I do, I first wanted to thank Manuel Vargas (and his guest blogger, Kelly McCormick) for doing a great job of stirring the philosophical pot during October. As usual, Vargas played the part of philosophical provocateur well and generated several interesting and illuminating discussion threads. Now that we're done (for now) feasting on the free will buffet provided by Vargas and McCormick, it's time to hand things over to our next FA--namely, Professor Tamler Sommers.

So, please join me in welcoming Professor Sommers to the Featured Author fray here at Flickers of Freedom. His first post should be up after the weekend.

p.s. In light of some helpful suggestions from recent Featured Authors, there will be some changes to the series starting perhaps as early as next month. For now, we're sticking with the old format for one more time around the block! Thats said, the upcoming schedule can be found below the fold: